A to Z Theme 2016

For my 2016 A to Z theme I used a meme that I ran across on the blog of Bridget Straub who first saw it on the blog of Paula Acton. This meme is a natural for me to use on my memoir blog. It's an A to Z concept and it's about me. No research and nothing complicated. I'm given twenty six questions or topics to discuss that are about me.

In April I kept my posts short and uncomplicated. In the midst of it all you might learn a few things about me that you didn't previously know.

Saturday, October 10, 2015

My Life According to my Books


The forty five cent paperback version published in 1967.
I still have it intact!

         Earlier this week on my blog Tossing It Out I mentioned about how I had pulled an old paperback book off of one of my bookshelves in order to read at the auto dealership as I waited for some work to be done on my van.  This copy of The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder was one that I had purchased in 1967 for forty five cents.  It had been required reading for my junior year of English and rather than borrow a copy from the library I chose to purchase a copy of my own.

       Coincidentally as well as ironically I had read a Los Angeles Times review of a book called Letter to a Future Lover by Ander Monson the day previous to having pulled my old high school paperback off the shelf to read at the car dealer.  Monson's  book consists of essays regarding the things found tucked away in and written on the pages of library books.

A corner torn from an English class vocabulary quiz.
I doodled my strange little drawing after the
 paper had been returned to me

       Opening my book I discovered that the bookmark that still remained hidden within was a bit of paper torn from a vocabulary quiz.  In my own cursive handwriting (which was not too bad I think) I had written my name, the class, and the date of December 20th of 1967.  On the outer margins of the book pages I had drawn in pencil sequences that when the pages were flipped through depicted animated scenes of cars and a person running.  Throughout the pages I had circled (or more accurately "rectangled") vocabulary words selected by Mrs. Vincent, my English teacher.

One of over 100 tiny drawings on the outer margin of the
book.  When the pages are flipped animated sequences
are depicted.  As you might see, art was never my forte.

        I was never one to mark up my textbooks for fear of being charged for the damage at the end of the school year, however I did occasionally deface my own books.  Thankfully I did not treat too many of my books with disrespect so most that I still own are in decent condition despite their age.  In fact, I have rarely marked books with notes, underlining, or highlighting.  Most of the time I considered my books my treasures unless I happened to be using them at school where boredom frequently set in.  Mindless scribbling was often my act of defying the tedium of school.

        Looking through my current personal library I would undoubtedly find odd scraps of paper--receipts, religious tracts, newspaper clippings, candy wrappers, and any other number of bits that would have served as the makeshift bookmark for the moment.  If there are books with penciled in marginalia, those written words or drawings were probably because the book had belonged to someone else and the markings were not done by me.

         All of the doodlings, notes, and detritus to be found within the pages of books are artifacts of history in a sense.   Those that are mine represent some part of my past that I might immediately recognize while other findings might be more puzzling and require some deciphering of my past.  When such ephemera comes from a book that has been acquired from a friend, a family member, a spouse, or even a second hand acquisition from some unknown past book owner then the artifacts become more of a mystery that might be solved or more often might remain something upon which to speculate.

         My rereading of The Bridge of San Luis Rey was worth the time spent though no specific memories were roused from the book itself.  However it was interesting to see the tiny drawings and the writings done by my own hand.   Some memories were revived.   I don't plan to be riffling through the pages of all the books in my home library, but I will now have a heightened awareness when I do happen to look within one on those old books.

        Our books are often a storehouse of small hidden treasures that can stir up the dusty hallways tucked away in the recesses of our minds.  A note scrawled on the page of a book can revive a forgotten memory as well as present a puzzler on which to ponder.   That odd scrap grabbed in haste for a bookmark might be a relic that awakens the past.  If you have old books from high school or college or just from a younger day, flip through a few.  You might be surprised by what you might find.

         Do you write on the pages on the books you own?    Have you ever made an exciting discovery within the pages of an older book?    What is the oddest thing you've ever used for a bookmark?



         

10 comments:

  1. I don't think I ever wrote in any books except my college text books which I highlighted and probably jotted down a couple of things. If I don't have a bookmark I usually end up dog earring the page. As for something found in a book, I have a vague memory of finding a postcard in a book I got in a used bookstore.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. JoJo, I think a postcard would be a great find. I've also found a few post cards in books and since I collect post cards, the ones I find always go into my collection. All the better if the card has been stamped and sent with some kind of message. That's history!

      Lee

      Delete
  2. I have always tucked items in books. At a yard sale, a woman brings a photo of myself with an old boyfriend she found in a book she was buying.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ann, I especially like to find things like photos inside of books. Now that's history!

      Lee

      Delete
  3. I write notes in the margins of my Bible (gasp!). Sometimes when I read back over those particular passages I know exactly why I wrote what I did. Other times I am puzzled by what I wrote there. My favorite bookmark was always the corner cut from an envelope..I then tucked it over the top corner of the page I stopped at.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Pam, great bookmark idea!

      I've often heard that we should write notes in our Bibles. With my aversion to marking up books I rarely mark my Bibles or any books. My wife notates the date when she finished reading. Since she has reread the Bible from front to end several times she has a lot of dates in all her Bibles.

      Lee

      Delete
  4. What a fantastic discovery! I've left a few business cards in the back of books over the last several years and on more than one occasion have found myself wondering "Now where did I put that guy's business card?" For whatever reason I actually fanned the pages of a book I intended to donate and discovered part of the hospital receipt from when I had my only child!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Diedre, I've found receipts in many of my books as well as the occasional business card. Those cards usually get discarded to some forgotten place anyway so might as well put them to use marking my place in a book.

      Lee

      Delete
  5. The only books I've ever written or drawn in were my college textbooks. However, I have notebooks from school with some crazy drawings and notes. Plus, my group of friends used to trade a notebook around. We'd take turns writing in it during class. I still have the two we ended up filling, and they're good for a laugh or a bit of reminiscence.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Shannon, most of my doodling and writing was in notebooks as well. I rarely wrote in college textbooks because I usually sold them at the end of the quarter and wanted them to be clean so they would sell easier. If I kept them for my home library then I didn't mark them because I prefer my books to be clean..

      Lee

      Delete

Tell your story. Express your thoughts. We want to hear from you. This blog no longer accepts comments from "Anonymous"--That guy is really starting to bug this blog. If you want to leave me a comment then please register if you aren't already--it's easy to do and I really want to hear from you.

Arlee Bird